PROFILE Book 'Rank and O Host: Staughton Lynd's Nyder

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

PROFILE Book 'Rank and O Host: Staughton Lynd's Nyder page 6 ad lib thursday, September 14, 1978 Nelson, Taml Luchow and Elizabeth Taylor. A visit to Studio 54, New York's most popular disco will also be presented. (Premiere) DTDODIldlSlW CONTEMPORARY NEBRASKA ART AND ARTISTS O JOKER'S WILD 6:00 UO MONDAY NIGHT AT THE MOVIES 'Audrey Rose' Stars: concerts Marsha Mason, Anthony OPERATION Hopkins. An unsuspecting couple are suddenly confronted PETTICOAT by a man claiming that their daughter was really his daughter In her previous life. (2 hrs., IS When Lt. Cmdr. Mike Haller mins.) (Robert Hogan) needs emergency O Q MONDAY NIGHT surgery, the nurses have to play FOOTBALL Baltimore Colts vs i' "J J ' ' doctor and the lives of the Sea New England Patriots (2 hrs., 45 .. - mins.) ' Y . ' ' in Tiger's crew are also placed 0 M.A.S.H. Hawkeye un- jeopardy as command is transferred dergoes a drastic change when to Lt. Mike Bender he becomes temporary com- l!''''''"'x the bungling mander of the 4077th and learns on ABC-T- V (Randolph Mantooth) the the bureaucracy and ac- comedy series 'Operation Petticoat,' companying headaches that Col. returning Monday, Sept. 18. Potter deals with daily. (Season In the crew is Premiere) 'Operation Spleen,' THE with of (Bffi FABULOUS SIXTIES faced the problem reaching Nixon's inauguration, the Super the only one who can perform the Bowl and the Apollo moon lan- critical operation, an old Greek ding are among the subjects with a bad heart covered in 1969. (60 mins.) doctor who, -- m MOVIE (ORAMA)'Vi "Story unfortunately, lives on an island ofa Woman" 1969 Robert Stack, taken over by the Japanese Imperial Blbl Anderson. A pianist tries to Marines. remain faithful to her husband Bender a new even though she's still, hung up exchanged compres- on an old flame. (2 hrs.) sor for a case of Scotch before 8:30 O 09 ONE DAY AT A TIME Ann setting sail and now the Sea Tiger is Romano's drops a Lincoln bomb on her that hard-presse- d to from a by announcing Lincoln Gen- escape he can no make child Captain & aTennille, Sept. 29, presented by hot on its trail as longer Japanese destroyer support payments to her. eral Hopsital Auxiliary Annual Benefit Fashion Show, the crew attempts to get the (Season Premiere; Pt. I. of a two-pa- rt doctor's help. episode) Pershing Municipal Auditorium. Also are JoAnn 8:00 O 09 LOU GRANT A woman is Albert with special guest Luther Allison in the 2nd starring Pflug, killed and nobody cares except King Warren Berlinger, Melinda Naud reporter Billie Newman, who annual Great Plains Blues Festival, Friday Sept. 15 at 8 even Lou is (pictured), Richard Brestoff, Jim finds that reluctant to p.m., Nebraska Union Centennial Room. Varney, Don Sparks, Fred Kareman pursue the story of a "routine" murder. (Season premiere; 60 and Scott McGinness. mins.) BACKYARD FARMER Omaha S NEWS John Browning Sept. 14,Orpheum Theater. 10:00 SERGEANT BILKO 0 news Tom Petty and the HeartbreakersWalter Egan, Sept. 15, hoe-dow- fJOQGD of Winoka. (60mins.) style n featuring DICK CAVETT SHOW Part WELCOME BACK, Nebraska Music Hall. EVENING O O square dancers. (60 of an interview with L. KOTTER School Joseph Buchanan High mins.) Mankiewicz, screenwriter, Cheap Trick, Sept. 17, Music Hall. greets a new-typ- e Sweathog who WOMEN IN SPORTS producer and director. Frankie Civic Auditorium. may rival Vinnie Barbarino for the CD TIC TAC DOUGH LOVE EXPERTS Vali, Sept. 24, 6:00 DICK VAN DYKE SHOW O affections of the girls when Beau 7:30 MOVIE MCOMEDY)"V4 8 MOVIE --(DRAMA)" "Green EmotionsBrothers Johnson, Sept. 30, Civic Auditorium. HOGAN'S HEROES smooth-talkin- g fj De Labarre, a "Easy to Wed" 1946 Esther Street" 1947 Lana 0 NEWS Dolphin O0QGD Southerner, strolls down the Williams, Van Johnson. A libel Turner, Donna Reed. SIX MILLION DOLLAR MAN Fiery hallways and causes all kinds of suit forces a newspaper to take woman and sister love 0 LIFE gentle Kansas City 05 AROUND US commotion. back a slick reporter in order to same man. mistake he 6:30 ADAM 12 Through CD WKRP IN CINCINNATI frame socialite. (2 hrs.) marries learns to love Black Sabbath, Sept. 17, Municipal Auditorium. flOMARY TYLER MOORE O wrong one, Q WKRP, a floundering radio OPERATION PETTICOAT her. (3 hrs., 5 TO TELL THE TRUTH Q O mins.) The Wiz, starting Sept. 22, in the Music Hall. O station in Cincinnati, is tran- When Lt. Commander Haller THE TONIGHT SHOW FAMILY FE O O O sformed from a format of musical needs emergency surgery, the Guest host: Rich Little. (90 mins.) Yes, Sept. 27, Kemper Arena. CD MUPPETSH nostalgia to hard-drivin- g ll nurses have to play doctor, and HONEYMOON ERS MACNEIL LEHRER Charlie Pride, Sept. 29, Municipal Auditorium. when Andy Travis, an the lives of the Sea Tiger's crew 0 CBS LATE MOVIE "Rockford REPORT 3 ambitious young man with strong are also placed in jeopardy as Files: The Kirkoff Case" NEWLYWED Larry GAME convictions, is hired as the command is transferred to the Klrkoff Inherits a fortune when 7:00 WANTED DEAD OR ALIVE St. Paul, Minnesota program director. Stars: Gary bumbling Lt. Bender. Stars: his are killed and he f) LITTLE HOUSE ON THE parents O O Sandy, Gordon Jump. (Premiere) Randolph Mantooth, Robert hires Rockford to find the mur- Steve Martin, Oct. 1, Civic Auditorium. PRAIRIE The and their Ingalls SUNDOWN SHINDIG The Hogan. (Season Premiere) derers. (R) "Coffee, Tea, Or Me?" former the Olesons barn-raisin- Bill Gaither Trio, Oct. 7, Civic Auditorium. neighbors, excitement of pioneer Q GD PEOPLE New en- Stars: Karen Valentine, John and Garveys, settle into new obs and saddle parties is tertainment series starring Davidson. Aerosmith, Oct. 14, Civic Auditorium. and a new way of life in the town in a western- - Guests: Willie captured rollicking Phyllis George. ANNA KARENINA Neil Oct. 15, Civic Auditorium. Episode Four. Alexel Karenin's YoungDolly Parton, suspicions about his wife's Billy Joel, Oct. 16, Civic Auditorium. conduct grow more intense every Bob Oct. Civic Auditorium. If xz day, but he remains in the capital Dylan, 31, while Anna spends the summer at the villa. (60 mins.) Denver STAR TREK 'Galileo Seven mins.) Foreigner, Sept. 16, McNichols Sports Arena. UNION MAIDS 10:48 11:00 BNEWS CJ CBS LATE MOVIE l Want To Ames, Iowa women recall their Keep My Baby' Stars: Susan Three Chicago Anspach, Jack Rader. The drama Gordon Lightfoot, Sept. 30, Stevens Auditorium. youth and with the help of newsreel revolves around a girl footage and photographs tell the who discovers that she is of the American pregnant and makes the decision stormy story to have the baby and raise It laborer's attempt to organize unions herself. (R) 'McMillan And Wife: during the 1930s in the PBS The Game Of Survival Stars: Rock Susan Saint SPORTS documentary 'Union Maids,' slated to Hudson, 19. James. (R) be rebroadcast Tuesday, Sept. 11:18 ff IRONSIDE Presented by WNETNew York, 11:30 PTL PROGRAM the film is an oral history political it ABC CAPTIONED NEWS but not didactic based on Alice and 11:38 FLASH GORDON 12:00 TOMORROW Tom PROFILE book 'Rank and O Host: Staughton Lynd's nyder. Guest: Bill Moyers. (60 File.' These three women, Sylvia, mins.) Kate and Stella, put their faith in the CD WRESTLING union for them the CIO and 12:18 NEWS 12:30 AFFIRMATIVE LIFE POWER FOR THE - An n irrnHfr-r- , a became active members of the 1:00 II FOCUS Chicago labor movement during (3 NEWS those tumultuous, strike-ridde- n O MOVIE DRAMA)Vi "Story times. ofa Woman" 1969 Robert Stack, HELP US WIN Blbl Anderson. A pianist tries to With humor and a remain faithful tc WEEK good passionate her husband - belief in what they accomplished, the even though she's still hung up mmzmRSHED ruimroK on an old flame. (105 mins.) ladies tell of their growing radicalism 1:38 NEWS . first as it O SUNDAY FfmaOTHMC-COAl-ETC- and the ClO's years 2:00 P MARY HARTMAN, MARY organized the rank-and-fi- le members HARTMAN (CBS) NFL FOOTBALL: 1:00 PM E O T. - 12:00 NOON the AFL did not want and did 2:48 O MOVIE COMEDY-DRAMA)" CtilCmOWlbDPROD. industry Bill" 1041 C.D.T. not want it to have. On the "Barnacle Wallace anna-re- - ." Beery, Marjorie Main. Bill Chicago Bears Detroit Lions. Philadelphia Eagles New iam soundtrack Pete Seeger sings the returns, marries and then after an Orleans Saints, San Francisco 49ers Houston Oilers, labor songs of the period 'Solidari- exciting sequence, again proves Buccaneers Minnesota what a good fisherman he Is. (105 Tampa Bay Vikings and i ty Forever,' 'Join the Union,' 'Carry Redskins St. Louis Cardinals. local CIO Be mins.) Washington (Check It On' and 'We Shall Not 4:30 CD DICK VAN DYK E SHOW listings for the game in your area.) UDfiOPMTJOfS HERE I Moved.' 8:00 CO ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW 8:30 UNTAMED WORLD Q (NBC) NFL FOOTBALL: 1:00 PM E.D.T. 12:00 NOON C.D.T. EVENING Hart as the girl offers a solution CD BASEBALL Kansas City 'Best Of Carson Guests: Johnny Cleveland Browns Atlanta Falcons, Kansas City Chiefs to a problem he faces in Royals vs Seattle Mariners (2 Mathls, Charles Nelson Reilly. New York Giants, Pittsburgh Steelers Cincinnati Bengals Kingsfield's class. Stars: John hrs., 30 mins.) Peter Benchley and Clare Rltter. and Seattle Seahawks New York local Houseman. James 8:30 TAXI The taxi (R; 90 mins.) Jets.
Recommended publications
  • Fact Or Fiction: Hollywood Looks at the News
    FACT OR FICTION: HOLLYWOOD LOOKS AT THE NEWS Loren Ghiglione Dean, Medill School of Journalism, Northwestern University Joe Saltzman Director of the IJPC, associate dean, and professor of journalism USC Annenberg School for Communication Curators “Hollywood Looks at the News: the Image of the Journalist in Film and Television” exhibit Newseum, Washington D.C. 2005 “Listen to me. Print that story, you’re a dead man.” “It’s not just me anymore. You’d have to stop every newspaper in the country now and you’re not big enough for that job. People like you have tried it before with bullets, prison, censorship. As long as even one newspaper will print the truth, you’re finished.” “Hey, Hutcheson, that noise, what’s that racket?” “That’s the press, baby. The press. And there’s nothing you can do about it. Nothing.” Mobster threatening Hutcheson, managing editor of the Day and the editor’s response in Deadline U.S.A. (1952) “You left the camera and you went to help him…why didn’t you take the camera if you were going to be so humane?” “…because I can’t hold a camera and help somebody at the same time. “Yes, and by not having your camera, you lost footage that nobody else would have had. You see, you have to make a decision whether you are going to be part of the story or whether you’re going to be there to record the story.” Max Brackett, veteran television reporter, to neophyte producer-technician Laurie in Mad City (1997) An editor risks his life to expose crime and print the truth.
    [Show full text]
  • ANNUAL REPORT 2015 16 A70 TV Acad Ad.Qxp Layout 1 7/8/16 11:43 AM Page 1
    ANNUAL REPORT 2015 16_A70_TV_Acad_Ad.qxp_Layout 1 7/8/16 11:43 AM Page 1 PROUD MEMBER OF »CBS THE TELEVISION ACADEMY 2 ©2016 CBS Broadcasting Inc. MESSAGE FROM THE CHAIRMAN AND CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER AS THE QUANTITY AND QUALITY OF CONTENT HAVE INCREASED in what is widely regarded as television’s second Golden Age, so have employment opportunities for the talented men and women who create that programming. And as our industry, and the content we produce, have become more relevant, so has the relevance of the Television Academy increased as an essential resource for television professionals. In 2015, this was reflected in the steady rise in our membership — surpassing 20,000 for the first time in our history — as well as the expanding slate of Academy-sponsored activities and the heightened attention paid to such high-profile events as the Television Academy Honors and, of course, the Creative Arts Awards and the Emmy Awards. Navigating an industry in the midst of such profound change is both exciting and, at times, a bit daunting. Reimagined models of production and distribution — along with technological innovations and the emergence of new over-the-top platforms — have led to a seemingly endless surge of creativity, and an array of viewing options. As the leading membership organization for television professionals and home to the industry’s most prestigious award, the Academy is committed to remaining at the vanguard of all aspects of television. Toward that end, we are always evaluating our own practices in order to stay ahead of industry changes, and we are proud to guide the conversation for television’s future generations.
    [Show full text]
  • Emmy Award-Winning Actor and Activist Edward Asner to Speak at the University of Dayton on Oct
    University of Dayton eCommons News Releases Marketing and Communications 10-4-1993 Emmy Award-Winning Actor and Activist Edward Asner to Speak at the University of Dayton on Oct. 14 Follow this and additional works at: https://ecommons.udayton.edu/news_rls Recommended Citation "Emmy Award-Winning Actor and Activist Edward Asner to Speak at the University of Dayton on Oct. 14" (1993). News Releases. 7806. https://ecommons.udayton.edu/news_rls/7806 This News Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Marketing and Communications at eCommons. It has been accepted for inclusion in News Releases by an authorized administrator of eCommons. For more information, please contact [email protected], [email protected]. 70A(l) The University of Dayton News Release Oct. 4, 1993 Contact: Candace Stuart EMMY AWARD-WINNING ACTOR AND ACTIVIST EDWARD ASNER TO SPEAK AT THE UNIVERSITY OF DAYTON ON OCT. 14 DAYTON, Ohio -- Edward Asner, the acclaimed actor and activist who portrayed the popular TV character Lou Grant on "The Mary Tyler Moore Show" and the dramatic series "Lou Grant," will speak at the University of Dayton at 8 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 14, in the ballroom of the Kennedy Union on campus. The lecture, titled "Morality and Freedom of Speech in the Media," is free and open to the public. As the gruff but good-hearted Lou Grant, Asner symbolized many of the ideals of journalism, both as a no-fluff television producer in the comedy "The Mary Tyler Moore Show" and as an ethical city editor in "Lou Grant." He won five Emmy awards for his Lou Grant portrayals and added two more to his collection for roles in "Rich Man, Poor Man" and "Roots." "I fear the Lou Grants of this world are a dying breed, a species failing to adapt to a rapidly changing environment," Asner wrote in the prologue to Unreliable Sources: A Guide to Detecting Bias in the News Media by journalists Martin Lee and Norman Solomon.
    [Show full text]
  • Gene Kearney Papers, 1932-1979 (Collection PASC.207)
    http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt7d5nf5r2 No online items Finding Aid for the Gene Kearney Papers, 1932-1979 (Collection PASC.207) Finding aid prepared by J. Vera and J. Graham; machine-readable finding aid created by Caroline Cubé. UCLA Library Special Collections Room A1713, Charles E. Young Research Library Box 951575 Los Angeles, CA, 90095-1575 (310) 825-4988 [email protected] © 2001 The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved. Finding Aid for the Gene Kearney PASC.207 1 Papers, 1932-1979 (Collection PASC.207) Title: Gene Kearney papers Collection number: PASC.207 Contributing Institution: UCLA Library Special Collections Language of Material: English Physical Description: 7.5 linear ft.(15 boxes.) Date (inclusive): 1932-1979 Abstract: Gene Kearney was a writer, director, producer, and actor in various television programs and motion pictures. Collection consists of scripts, production information and clippings related to his career. Language of Materials: Materials are in English. Physical Location: Stored off-site at SRLF. Advance notice is required for access to the collection. Please contact the UCLA Library Special Collections Reference Desk for paging information. Creator: Kearney, Gene R Restrictions on Access COLLECTION STORED OFF-SITE AT SRLF: Open for research. Advance notice required for access. Contact the UCLA Library Special Collections Reference Desk for paging information. Portions of this collection are restricted. Consult finding aid for additional information. Restrictions on Use and Reproduction Property rights to the physical object belong to the UCLA Library Special Collections. Literary rights, including copyright, are retained by the creators and their heirs.
    [Show full text]
  • Introduction to the Complete Directory to Prime Time Network and Cable TV Shows
    Broo_9780345497734_2p_fm_r1.qxp 7/31/07 10:32 AM Page ix INTRODUCTION In the following pages we present, in a sin- eral headings. For example, newscasts are gle volume, a lifetime (or several lifetimes) of summarized under News, movie series under television series, from the brash new medium Movies and sports coverage under Football, of the 1940s to the explosion of choice in the Boxing, Wrestling, etc. All other series are 2000s. More than 6,500 series can be found arranged by title in alphabetical order. There here, from I Love Lucy to Everybody Loves is a comprehensive index at the back to every Raymond, The Arthur Murray [Dance] Party cast member, plus appendixes showing an- to Dancing with the Stars, E/R to ER (both nual network schedules at a glance, the top with George Clooney!), Lost in Space to Lost 30 rated series each season, Emmy Awards on Earth to Lost Civilizations to simply Lost. and other information. Since the listings are alphabetical, Milton Network series are defined as those fed out Berle and The Mind of Mencia are next-door by broadcast or cable networks and seen si- neighbors, as are Gilligan’s Island and The multaneously across most of the country. Gilmore Girls. There’s also proof that good Broadcast networks covered are ABC, CBS, ideas don’t fade away, they just keep coming NBC, Fox, CW, MyNetworkTV, ION (for- back in new duds. American Idol, meet merly PAX) and the dear, departed DuMont, Arthur Godfrey’s Talent Scouts. UPN and WB. We both work, or have worked, in the TV Original cable series are listed in two dif- industry, care about its history, and have ferent ways.
    [Show full text]
  • Honorary Entertainment Industry Board
    Honorary Entertainment Industry Board The Survivor Mitzvah Project’s Honorary Entertainment Industry Board, along with other artists from stage, screen, and the music industry, donates their time and talents to bring public awareness to the mission of The Survivor Mitzvah Project – to bring emergency aid to the last survivors of the Holocaust in Eastern Europe. EDWARD ASNER – Versatile, committed, eloquent and talented are all adjectives that describe Edward Asner. Best known for his comedic and dramatic crossover as the gruff but soft-hearted journalist Lou Grant, a role he originated on the landmark TV comedy The Mary Tyler Moore Show and continued in the drama Lou Grant, for which he won 5 Emmys and three Golden Globes, he received 2 more Emmy and Golden Globes for Rich Man, Poor Man and Roots. His career demonstrates a consummate ability to transcend the line between comedy and drama. One of the most honored actors in the history of television, Mr. Asner has 7 Emmy Awards and 16 nominations, as well as 5 Golden Globes. He served as National President of SAG and received the Guild’s Life Achievement Award for career achievement and humanitarian accomplishment and was inducted into the TV Academy Hall of Fame. He has advocated for human rights, world peace, environmental preservation and political freedom, receiving the Anne Frank Human Rights Award, among other honors. With more than 100 TV credits, his films include Fort Apache the Bronx, JFK and Elf, and he was the lead voice in UP!, which won two Golden Globes and two Academy Awards. Presently Mr.
    [Show full text]
  • Joseph Waters
    Transcript of oral history interview with Joseph Waters Gladstone/ Maplewood Fire Department, 1980-2007 by Kate Cavett of HAND in HAND Productions and Bob Jensen, President, Maplewood Area Historical Society for the Maplewood Area Historical Society December 16, 2013 at HAND in HAND Productions’ office in Saint Paul, Minnesota 1 © Maplewood Area Historical Society 2014 This project has been made possible by the Arts and Cultural Heritage Fund through the vote of Minnesotans on November 4, 2008. Administered by the Minnesota Historical Society. All pictures are from the Waters family and Maplewood Area Historical Society 2 ORAL HISTORY Oral History is the spoken word in print. Oral histories are personal memories shared from the perspective of the narrator. By means of recorded interviews oral history documents collect spoken memories and personal commentaries of historical significance. These interviews are transcribed verbatim and minimally edited for accessibility. Greatest appreciation is gained when one can listen to an oral history aloud. Oral histories do not follow the standard language usage of the written word. Transcribed interviews are not edited to meet traditional writing standards; they are edited only for clarity and understanding. The hope of oral history is to capture the flavor of the narrator’s speech and convey the narrator’s feelings through the timbre and tempo of speech patterns. An oral history is more than a family tree with names of ancestors and their birth and death dates. Oral history is recorded personal memory, and that is its value. What it offers complements other forms of historical text, and does not always require historical corroboration.
    [Show full text]
  • Quality TV As Liberal TV
    Michael z. Newman and other cultural productions similarly blessed with prestige. Quality TV as Liberal TV This essay will sketch a historical outline of this tradition of Quality TV as libera l TV, ident ifying its sources and examining its Alongside so many changes in American television over its years as. expressions of an ideology. a mass medium there have also been continuit ies. These are easily) In doing so I am choosing a handful of examples of emblematic obscured by the presentist "Golden Age" rhetoric of popular critics or influential texts over this timespan rather than canvassing in the early twenty -first century.1One such continuity, spanning ; all of the telev isual representations one might associate with several aesthetic and industrial eras, is a trad ition of quality in, liberalism. There will necessarily be a provisional character scripted prime-time series, which is intertwined with a tradition to my discussion, as the topic is big enough for a much longer of liberal politics in elite urban American culture. 2 More than work. Numerpus details remain to be filled in, but I hope that the thirty years ago, Jane Feuer argued that "quality TV is liberal TV."3 connections will at least seem apposite, and the liberalism of She was talking about programs like The Mary Tyler Moore Show . American Quality TV worthy of further critical elaboration. and WKRPin Cincinnati, and using "quality" not simply to judge > Unlike more established, older art forms, televis ion has relative value but to mark off a group of programs recognizable struggled to be accepted as legitimate culture worth discussing by producers and audiences alike as having prestige.4 If Quality in aesthetic terms in the first place.
    [Show full text]
  • Emmy Award Winners
    CATEGORY 2035 2034 2033 2032 Outstanding Drama Title Title Title Title Lead Actor Drama Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Lead Actress—Drama Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Supp. Actor—Drama Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Supp. Actress—Drama Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Outstanding Comedy Title Title Title Title Lead Actor—Comedy Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Lead Actress—Comedy Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Supp. Actor—Comedy Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Supp. Actress—Comedy Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Outstanding Limited Series Title Title Title Title Outstanding TV Movie Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Lead Actor—L.Ser./Movie Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Lead Actress—L.Ser./Movie Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Supp. Actor—L.Ser./Movie Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Supp. Actress—L.Ser./Movie Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title CATEGORY 2031 2030 2029 2028 Outstanding Drama Title Title Title Title Lead Actor—Drama Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Lead Actress—Drama Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Supp. Actor—Drama Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Supp. Actress—Drama Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Outstanding Comedy Title Title Title Title Lead Actor—Comedy Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Lead Actress—Comedy Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Supp. Actor—Comedy Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Supp.
    [Show full text]
  • Cagney and Lacey: Negotiating the Controversial in Popular Television
    DOCUMENT RESUME ED 293 518 IR 013 042 AUTHOR Hillier, Jim TITLE Cagney and Lacey: Negotiating the Controversial in Popular Television. PUB DATE Jul 86 NOTE 30p.; Paper presented at the International Television Studies Conference (London, England, July 10-12, 1986). PUB TYPE Reports - Evaluative/Feasibility (142) -- Speeches /Conference Papers (150) EDRS PRICE MF01/PCO2 Plus Postage. DESCRIPTORS Commercial Television; Conflict; *Content Analysis; *Females; *Feminism; Individual Differences; *Police; *Programing (Broadcast); *Social Problems; Television Research IDENTIFIERS *United States ABSTRACT This paper discusses some of the ways in which the commitment of the television series Cagney and Lacey to the examination of often controversial social issues from liberal or progressive standpoints--especially issues associated with the women's movement--is worked through in narrative practice. The origins and development of the series are described, as well as its position in a long line of television crime/detective stories and the character portrayals of the two women detectives. Several of the episodes are then reviewed to analyze ways in which Cagney and Lacey negotiate controversies such as ethnic disadvantage, the vulnerability of illegal immigrants, class differences, latchkey children, and various feminist issues, including abortion. It is concluded that the series must be regarded as progressive in that it succeeds in promoting openness and awareness of socially controversial situations with considerable explicit commitment to its
    [Show full text]
  • Presidents Notes N1EZH Barry Kennedy Presidents Monthly Message for December 2014 from Barry – N1EZH
    December 2014 Volume 53 Issue 12 Presidents notes N1EZH Barry Kennedy Presidents Monthly Message for December 2014 from Barry – N1EZH: Please Note: There will NOT be a December MARA Monthly Meeting! Winter is almost upon us and judging from the weather, may be a long one this year! I was able to basically trade my Tipper Mount and masts that were for a 39’ Rohn 25G Tower that I may only put up about 29’ with a tilt over of some sort which I hope to be able to clean up, paint and put up in the Spring. With the additional Rotor and mast for the antennas will be about 36’ or so tall when I am done. This will make it a few feet higher than my old one from a couple of years ago before the storm took it down. If anyone else in our club has done a project this year, or may be planning one either during the Winter or next Spring, then please take some photos and submit them to Rick – [email protected] so he can put them in our MARA Newsletter. For those of you that are on Facebook, I began a Massasoit Amateur Radio Association Facebook Page and have posted several items of interest on there. I have been updating the page with Club Events, photos, etc.from time to time in the hope that it will become another avenue for us in which to spark interest in our club and keep members informed of what we are doing outside of our Club Meetings and in our Community.
    [Show full text]
  • Middletown Police Probe Sign Damage
    ' f Weather 7 turn. tMunrrtnrs U. ftmay tddsy *& a M»* suwmd W. Wloalilit with tow fa tte-To. 24,500 morrow fair with Increasing { RedBankArea doudinMi late la the day and J • " V • Copyright—Th» Red Bank Register, Inc., IKS. occasional rain Saturday night DIAL 7414)010 or Sunday. See weather, page >• MONMOUTH COUNTY'S HOME NEWSPAPER FOR 87 YEARS VOL. 88, NO. 24 FRIDAY, JULY 30, 1965 76 PER COPY! PAGE ONE Raritan's Ex-Chief, Truck Firm Owner Indicted FREEHOLD — Farmer Rari- , Service basis April 30, Guntner The Ocean County man is sec- Register that Guntner would Mr. Brady said the policemen tan Township Police Chief Ger- Is a wholesale meat salesman retary of the company's Inde- have been welcomed as police reported the offers to Capt. Wil- ard F. Guntner and a trucking for Swift and Co., a post he had pendent Drivers Association chief in the permanent depart- liam J. Smith, who is acting company owner, Anthony Nappi, previously dovetailed with his though he said he plans to re- ment. chief, and that the latter called are under indictment for an at- part-time police duties. sign that position at a meeting "But we could not match his in the chief of county detectives, tempt to trap a former Nappi Nappi is president and owner tonight. That he has favored re- salary in private employment," John M, Gawler, who investi- driver in a traffic law violation. of Nappi Trucking Co., a tank placement of the Independent the commissioner added. gated. Monmouth County Prosecutor fleet in interstate and intrastate group by a local of the Team- According to the indictments, The commissioner said that Vincent P.
    [Show full text]